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DAVID CAMDEN VIRGINIA-WEST REGIONAL PRESIDENT, TRUIST FINANCIAL CORP., ROANOKE


Based in Roanoke, Camden manages Truist’s operations in the western part of Virginia as one of 24 regional presidents within the bank’s 15-state footprint. Truist was formed in 2019 by the merger of mega- banks BB&T and SunTrust Bank. It debuted at No. 217 on the Fortune 500 list and rose in rank to No. 119 this year. The bank earned nearly $4.5 billion in profits last year on $24.4 billion in revenue. Aſter the merger, Truist announced it planned to close two BB&T branches and one SunTrust location


in Camden’s market, leaving about 20 branches in the Roanoke Valley.


A Richmond native, Camden earned a bachelor’s degree in economics from Hampden-Sydney College and attended the Virginia Bankers School of Bank Management. He worked at Wachovia and Wells Fargo before joining SunTrust as a commercial banking execu- tive for Virginia and the Carolinas in 2010. He was then named SunTrust’s president and CEO for its Savannah, Georgia, region in 2014.


STEPHAN Q. CASSADAY FOUNDER, CHAIRMAN AND CEO, CASSADAY & CO. INC, McLEAN


Cassaday’s been ranked as Barron’s No. 1 financial adviser in Virginia every year except one since 2014. In 1993, aſter more than a decade on Wall Street, Cassaday founded his firm, which manages $4.4 billion in assets and employs 65 people. He and his wife, Mary, are major donors to Central Union Mission, Intrepid Fallen


Heroes Fund, PRS/Crisis Link, Salvation Army, Save the Children, Smile Train, So Others Might Eat, The Lamb Center, The House DC, the Washington Jesuit Academy, Wounded Warriors and Youth for Tomorrow. He endowed a scholarship at his alma mater, Radford University, and sits on the board of directors for the Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy.


BEST ADVICE FOR OTHERS: Focus on your key strengths and delegate everything else. Invest in people, practice radical inclusion and empower them to think like owners. Be vulnerable, admit your mistakes, make customers raving fans.


PERSON I ADMIRE: My wife. Elegant, beautiful inside and out, street-smart math teacher with poor taste in men. My best friend and adviser. I would be nothing without her.


WHAT I’VE LEARNED: Gratitude every day. Humility.


WHAT I’LL NEVER DO AGAIN: Ski moguls. THEODORE ‘TED’ L.


CHANDLER CO-FOUNDER AND MANAGING DIRECTOR, NEW RICHMOND VENTURES, RICHMOND


TRISTAN M. CAUDRON MANAGING DIRECTOR-INVESTMENTS, CAUDRON MEGARY BLACKBURN WEALTH MANAGEMENT GROUP, ALEXANDRIA


A certified financial planner and the man- aging director for investments at his Wells Fargo Advisors firm, Caudron was named one of the top four advisers in Virginia by Barron’s this year and has been on the list since 2014. He earned a bachelor’s degree in eco- nomics and psychology and an MBA from Georgetown University. A father of four, he has coached his kids’ sports teams, and his hobbies include tennis, platform tennis, skiing and cycling.


BEST ADVICE FOR OTHERS: Be patient. Despite recent extraordinary gains in the stock market, long-term wealth accumulation is made gradually, by being diversified and patient during good times and bad.


WHAT MAKES ME PASSIONATE ABOUT MY WORK: I enjoy helping others. Our clients look to us to help them with their investment planning to save and build portfolios toward financial independence. I am so honored when a client thanks me for the good work that we do in our team.


The former chairman and CEO of the now-defunct Fortune 500 title insurance group LandAmerica Financial Group Inc., Chandler is the managing director of a venture capital firm he co-founded in 2011 with fellow Virginia 500 honorees Jim Ukrop and Bob Mooney. NRV invests in early stage companies that


have moved beyond proof of concept and show the potential for high growth. Chandler sits on the boards of several of the companies backed by NRV, including WealthForge and Health Warrior.


Chandler holds a bachelor’s degree in accounting from the University of Virginia and a law degree from the University of Richmond School of Law, where he serves as a member of the advisory board. He also sits on boards for the Virginia


Foundation for Independent Colleges and U.Va.’s Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy, and he co-chairs the Richmond and Hampton Roads regional col- laborative RVA757 Connect. He has chaired the boards of Virginia Commonwealth University’s Massey Cancer Center, the Greater Richmond Chamber of Commerce, the Partnership for Nonprofit Excellence, the Maymont Foundation and the Richmond Arts Foundation.


www.VirginiaBusiness.com 79


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